So this in a little more important than what happened at camp yesterday.  This morning I was informed that a legend of music from St. Louis has left this earth.  She is with our Lord and Savior.  She Will truly be missed.  
"Singer Mae Wheeler  (pictured), known to generations of St. Louis music fans as “Lady  Jazz," died this evening at her home in Maryland Heights after a long  illness. She was 77.
Wheeler, known for her charity fundraising  efforts as well as for a musical career that spanned six decades, had  been battling colon cancer since 2006, and was diagnosed two years ago  with leukemia. Her doctors had sent her home from the hospital last  month, saying that further treatment would be ineffective. In recent  weeks, Wheeler was surrounded by and cared for by family and friends,  including a granddaughter who established a Facebook account  for her so friends and fans could send their best wishes. During that  time, she gave a final interview to Terry Perkins of the St. Louis  Beacon, which you can read here.
Born  on May 15, 1934 in Memphis, TN, Wheeler moved with her family to the  St. Louis suburb of Richmond Heights when she was five. She graduated in  1951 from Douglass School  in Webster Groves, and according to published reports, later attended  Forest Park Community College for about a year, majoring in music and  communications, before meeting her husband Jimmie Lee, who was in the  landscaping business.
The couple had five children, but when  Jimmy Lee died of kidney disease in 1964, Wheeler was left as the  family's sole breadwinner. She worked as a restaurant cook, took in  laundry, and cleaned houses to make ends meet, but never gave up on her  desire to sing. Wheeler eventually broke in to the music business at the  tail end of St. Louis' Gaslight Square  era, crediting fellow singer Jeanne Trevor for helping her to get her  first gigs at places such as Vanity Fair, the Black Horse, the Dark Side  and the Red Carpet.
Wheeler often referred to herself not as a  jazz singer, but as a “song stylist" who interpreted a wide variety of  material, from jazz and blues to pop, rock, Broadway and more. In the  1970s and into the 1980s, Wheeler was a regular performer at Hannegan's  on Laclede's Landing and also worked at other spots such the Moose  Lounge in north St. Louis and an early incarnation of Kennedy's, also on  the Landing. In later years, she performed frequently at the  now-defunct Brandt's in University City, as well as at other  restaurants, lounges and clubs around town.
Over the course of  her career, Wheeler worked with hundreds of St. Louis musicians and  singers, and also appeared with nationally known entertainers including  Pearl Bailey, Count Basie, Sonny Stitt, Mitch Miller and Arthur Prysock.  As best as can be determined, she released two recordings, Live in  2000, and Just Friends in 2002. Both seem currently to be out of print.
Wheeler  also became known as an event producer and philanthropist, putting on  the first version of what would come to be called “The Divas Show" in  1996 at Westport Playhouse. Subsequent editions of the concert would  follow annually for the next dozen years, showcasing many St. Louis  female vocalists and raising money for Wheeler's favorite charity, a  scholarship fund for high school graduates with C averages who wanted to  attend college. One of the best known recipients of one of Wheeler's  $1,000 scholarships is drummer Kim Thompson,  who put the money toward her education at Manhattan School of Music and  has gone on to become a successful professional musician, performing  with pop singer Beyonce and many others.
“Maybe now, she'll reach back," Wheeler said of Thompson in a 2010 interview with Kenya Vaughn of the St. Louis American.  “In doing all of this I just want people to know that we need to help  one another. Plus, I want these children to know to always reach for the  sky and don't ever stop trying to be a winner."
Wheeler moved  from her longtime home in Richmond Heights to Maryland Heights in 2007,  as her old neighborhood was bought out for a redevelopment project. Her  final production “Unforgettable Legends" took place on Halloween night  2010 at the Sheldon Concert Hall. Mae Wheeler is survived by two  daughters, MarYam Aaten and Mary Wheeler, and three sons, Steve Wheeler,  Kenneth Wheeler and Khamaron Wheeler, as well as 16 grandchildren and  at least 18 great grandchildren. As of this writing, there's been no  announcement made yet about funeral arrangements or a memorial service.
For  more about Mae Wheeler's life and career, see the embedded video below,  which is a segment aired on local PBS affiliate KETC's program Living  St. Louis earlier this year when Wheeler won a Lifetime Achievement  Award from the Arts and Education Council of Greater St. Louis. You also  may enjoy the video below that, which features an brief informal  conversation between Wheeler and a fan at Brandt's back in 2006.
A  personal note: Although I didn't know Mae Wheeler well, I had a chance  to perform with her (and for her) a few times in recent years at various  benefits and all-star shows, and to cover her as a journalist. I liked  her as a person, and admired her philanthropic efforts and fighting  spirit. The St. Louis community certainly is diminished by her passing,  but our town also benefited greatly from the things she did while she  was passing through. Rest in peace, Lady Jazz."
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=82940
I have had the honor of singing and playing with her several times in my life, she was, is one of my inspirations.
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